Meet Mark

Let me introduce myself. My name is Mark Sisson. I’m 63 years young. I live and work in Malibu, California. In a past life I was a professional marathoner and triathlete. Now my life goal is to help 100 million people get healthy. I started this blog in 2006 to empower people to take full responsibility for their own health and enjoyment of life by investigating, discussing, and critically rethinking everything we’ve assumed to be true about health and wellness...

5 Ways to Get the Most Bang for Your Workout Buck

Late last year, I introduced the idea of the minimum effective dose: the lowest dose to produce a desired outcome. Whether it’s calorie intake, exercise, sunlight, carbohydrates, or work habits, we often think we need much more than we actually do to get the results we want. Why crank out those extra reps, put in those extra few hours, choke down another chicken breast if they won’t make youany more prepared to handle what life dishes out? Failing to heed the minimum effective dose costs you money, time, and mental real estate. Figuring out the minimum effective dose for the various inputs shaping our days can make us more efficient and open up the rest of our life to do the things we actually want to do.

What, exactly, are the minimum effective doses for exercise? How little do I have to train to stay and/or get fit? And what kind of effects can we expect to get from said minimal doses?

The answers to those questions will depend on who’s asking, but we have a few specific examples of people maintaining, improving, or radically transforming their fitness levels with minimum effective doses of exercise. Let’s take a look.

1. To maintain cardiovascular fitness.

Cardiovascular de-conditioning during the off season is a big issue in cardiovascular-intensive sports like soccer. The last thing many athletes want to do after a grueling season is to resume even more-grueling training on a regular basis. Understandable, but then they come back a couple months later and suck wind for a few weeks until they’ve regained their endurance. What if there were a quick and dirty, efficient way to train and maintain your endurance in the off-season — or any season, for the average person who doesn’t want to work out more than he has to work out?

In 2014, semi-pro soccer players were placed on one of two off-season training regimens:

High intensity interval training, once a week.

High intensity interval training, once every two weeks.

Both HIIT regimens used identical training loads, and it was fairly brutal: five 4-minute high intensity rounds at 87-97% of maximum heart rate. No mention of rest intervals, but I’d imagine they were at least several minutes long to allow them to recover sufficiently. Whether they did it every week or every two weeks, the soccer players maintained their VO2max. There was no cardiovascular advantage to doing it every week. Those biweekly sessions would have been miserable, but they were over pretty quickly, leaving the soccer players plenty of time to work on sport-specific skills and other forms of training (or, you know, reading, going out to dinner with friends and family, hiking, watching good movies, etc). In fact, those players running HIIT every other week also trained a couple hours every week, mostly strength training; the every week group trained over five additional hours a week.

2. To improve muscle endurance and aerobic capacity.

We all (think we) know how to improve aerobic fitness: cardio. Whatever that means. But cardio, at least how most people envision it, takes forever and is pretty darn boring. What if you could improve your aerobic fitness while also improving your muscular endurance — the amount of work your muscles can endure, the amount of time you can keep your force output high — in a fraction of the time?

Four times a week for four weeks, adult females performed a single four-minute Tabata protocol with a single exercise. Exercise choices included burpees, mountain climbers, jumping jacks, or squat thrusts. Another group ran on the treadmill for 30 minutes at 85% max heart rate.

After four weeks, their fitness levels were evaluated. While the treadmill group enjoyed a 7% improvement in aerobic capacity, the interval group improved theirs by 8%. And when it came to muscle endurance, the interval group saw massive gains:

Leg extensions: +40%

Chest press: +207%

Situps: +64%

Pushups: +135%

Back extensions: +75%

Most importantly, the women found the Tabata exercise protocols more enjoyable and sustainable than the aerobic exercise protocol. Their “intention to engage” in exercise was higher than in the aerobic group.

All that in just 16 minutes of work a week.

3. To improve overall physical fitness.

What does “physical fitness” mean to you? In my book, it’s a combination of strength, strength-endurance, and aerobic capacity. The ability to go hard, go fast, and go long. A pair of researchers came up with a “7 minute workout” designed to improve these physical capacities in as little time as possible. The exercises are basic, but effective (as is always the case, right?). Each one is to be performed for 30 seconds with 10 seconds of rest in between exercises.

Jumping jacks

Wall sits

Pushups

Crunches

Step-ups

Squats

Dips

Planks

Running in place with high knees

Lunges

Pushups with rotation

Side planks

Solid list of movements, eh? This year, researchers tested the 7 minute workout. A cohort of men and women were divided into three groups. One group did a 7-minute circuit training workout three times a week, another group did a 14-minute circuit training workout three times a week, and the third group was sedentary. The 14-minute and 7-minute groups performed the same circuit exercises; the 14-minute group just did them twice.

Both exercising groups enjoyed improvements in muscular endurance. The males in both groups also got stronger, while the females improved their aerobic capacity. Training for 14 minutes (which is fairly minimal to begin with) wasn’t necessary to obtain results.

4. To increase metabolic health.

You’ve probably heard me discuss mitochondrial biogenesis: the creation of entirely new mitochondria. This is important because mitochondria are the power plants of the cell and ultimately the body. They metabolize fuel and convert it into useable energy. The more mitochondria you have, and the better they work, the more fat and glucose you’re going to utilize. And since energy overload is toxic to our cells and predictive of many disease states (diabetes, inflammatory conditions, etc) having more mitochondria on hand will keep you healthier for longer. How much exercise do you actually have to do to promote mitochondrial biogenesis?

I’ve also talked about the importance of maintaining good insulin sensitivity and how exercise can hep in that regard. Turns out that it doesn’t take much to see a positive effect. Research indicates that four to six 30 second bouts of all-out sprint cycling with four minutes of rest done three times a week improves insulin sensitivity in already-active and sedentary young adults. Measurements were taken 72 hours post training, just to be sure that the improved insulin sensitivity wasn’t a result of acute exercise effects. That’s 6-8 minutes a week of actual work for massive improvements.

5. To control blood sugar.

Visit most fitness communities online and walking gets short shrift. Walking isn’t exercise, they’ll say. It’s a poor substitute for “real” movement that invariably involves grunting, heavy weights, gallons of milk, and chalk. Not to take away from the heavy lifting, because that stuff is indispensable. But walking isn’t useless; it’s essential. There’s even evidence that a tiny amount of walking at a moderate pace — 15 minutes’ worth, to be exact — is enough to blunt the postprandial spike in glucose that can occur in people and lead to real problems down the line. Make that walking “brisk” and you can cut the necessary volume down to a single 21 minute bout while enjoying beneficial effects on postprandial insulin.

So don’t let anyone tell you those short post-meal strolls aren’t helping. They are. They represent a minimal yet highly effective dose of movement that improves your ability to handle blood sugar spikes after meals and regulate your fasting blood sugar throughout the day. More intense, higher volume training certainly improves blood sugar control, too, but a short walk after meals is the simplest, easiest, and most minimal.

Let’s briefly review:

To maintain your cardiovascular fitness, do 5 4-minute intense intervals once every two weeks.

To improve your conditioning and muscular endurance, do standard protocol Tabata burpees (or mountain climbers or any of the other exercises listed) a few times a week.

To become more fit overall, a 7 minute continuous bodyweight workout is sufficient.

To increase insulin sensitivity, go all out on the bike four times for 30 seconds with four minutes of rest, three times a week.

To grow more mitochondria, five 4-second all-out sprints with 20 seconds of rest, three times a week might be enough.

Furthermore, many of these protocols will have crossover effects with each other. You don’t have to — and probably shouldn’t — do all of them, because then you’ve just constructed a high volume training regimen.

Not so daunting, is it?

What are your minimal effective doses for exercise? How little have you gotten away with while enjoying improved health, fitness, and vitality? I’m always looking for ways to cut back on training while retaining the effects, so have at it down below!

Thanks for reading, everyone.

Prefer listening to reading? Get an audio recording of this blog post, and subscribe to the Primal Blueprint Podcast on iTunes for instant access to all past, present and future episodes here.

Mark, you and I must be sharing the same wavelength. I have been working on my own MED workout to help with improving my cardio, strength, and flexibility for my martial arts training. Would love other’s input: Warmup: -30 seconds of bouncing in a fighting stance (works calves) followed by 30 seconds of shadow boxing – repeat 5 times Dynamic stretches: -10 leg swings to the front, back, and side per leg -10 arm circles to the front and back Workout: -1 set of squats or lunges -1 set of side lunges going down as far as I can to… Read more »

Normally I would agree with you, but the training revolves more around the techniques so typically it is pretty low intensity. I would equate it to a mixture of slow and medium cardio, depending on what we’re doing.

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Borut B.

2 years 7 months ago

I would do those high intensity exercises on a separate day in full and not as you described. You are targeting a different type of muscle fibres and body processes by high intensity and low intensity martial arts techniques.
Unless you are training martial arts every single day. Then your teacher knows which protocol is best to strengthen your body and how to incorporate this routine into your protocol.

When I was practicing martial arts we had technique’s trainings and strength trainings on separate days.

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Borut B.

2 years 7 months ago

Hi, Mark,

Thank you. Would you be so kind to say a few words what regime could work as you are stating doing all of them would make the workout protocol too strenous and ineffective.

That seems borderline insane. Just because the separate studies used different exercises, as Mark points out, does not mean you have to nor should you try to use all of them. Tabat IS a type of HIIT, as are the cycle sprints, and the 7-minute circuit is suggested to be done 3 X per week. And the 5X4minute all out is for maintaining cardiovascular fitness when you aren’t able to do other cardio, not necessarily to build it. Why not something like this? MON Sprints or Tabata TUE 7-minute circuit WED Sprints or Tabata THU 4-sec all-out sprints FRI 7-minute… Read more »

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elmer

2 years 7 months ago

I don’t much care about my health but I enjoy lifting weights, and I like to look good, so I do as much weight lifting as I can given my age.

I understand that some people do not enjoy exercising but if you’re the kind of person who does enjoy it, it’s hard to wrap your mind around the concept of minimizing time spent exercising. To me it’s like suggesting that I minimize the time I spend having sex.

I understand where you’re coming from and would agree on the general assumption. However some people, like myself, have specific exercise/training goals that greatly benefit from a MED approach. I spend anywhere from 4-8 hours a week training in various martial arts. On top of my standard obligations (work, kids, chores, etc), this leaves me with very little time and energy to devote to a full weightlifting regimen. However, I still want to gain muscle. A MED approach to strength training makes sense in my case. And who would want to minimize sex!? I could already see that discussion between… Read more »

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tom LI

2 years 7 months ago

Amen. I may be a freak, but I actually enjoy exercising, look forward to it, and can’t comprehend those who dread it. I get it if you’re not in shape, but once there, other then real fatique and time issues, what’s to complain about?

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HB

2 years 7 months ago

I have always hated exercise. Walking yes, but anything more vigorous used to give me throbbing headaches as a child, so I was put off at an early age. Team sports never worked for me, due to above and being short sighted but not diagnosed, so being hit by the ball was a constant danger! I no longer get throbbing headaches, thanks to a good chiro then Alexander technique. And I have glasses for the eyesight! Now at 52, I’ve been doing Mark’s set of exercises for 15 minutes twice a week and loving that it’s short! I like the… Read more »

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Chad Zuber

2 years 7 months ago

A year ago I did a one-week personal challenge to gain muscle mass, strength and endurance without a gym. I worked out each of the seven days but mostly did super short high intensity (HIIT) exercises right before meals. I randomly picked usually one exercise before a meal. I would do a few all out sprints or 100 push-ups as fast as possible or a total of 30 pullups or 50 mytatic crunches. Usually one of those exercises. Once a day I’d also do a longer workout of either a long run or lift heavy boulders for an hour. I… Read more »

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Kate

2 years 7 months ago

is this a maintenance protocol or could someone who still has weight to lose follow these guidelines as well? Thanks

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Jeff

2 years 7 months ago

I believe the general consensus around here is that exercise plays a pretty limited role in weight loss. That was certainly my experience. Focusing seriously on nutrition yielded much greater results than the months I spent sweating it out on the elliptical.

Still, if you’re interested in working your way towards a serious calorie deficit, these exercises- being short and focused- don’t sound very effective for achieving that state.

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Shary

2 years 7 months ago

Yep, my experience too. I lost 40 pounds doing nothing more than Paleo while beached with a screwed-up knee. My “exercise” consisted of hobbling to the bathroom a few times a day. In addition to losing weight, I streamlined my body amazingly solely by eliminating grain products. Bottom line: Exercise for muscle tone and fitness but diet for weight loss.

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Nocona

2 years 7 months ago

I think Mark’s Primal Blueprint excercises from the book are all we need. It is very effective and minimal.
Pushups
Pullups
Squats
Planks
Sprint once every 7-10 days
20-30 minute workouts twice a week.

It doesn’t get any simpler than that.
For an hour and 15 minutes a week, you will be in fantastic shape.

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Joshua Hansen

2 years 7 months ago

In my own experience working out didn’t seem to have a gigantic impact on weight loss when I was really overweight (50ish pounds). However, it became essential to deal with the last 15 or so when I plateaued. I actually really upped the carbs at that point too.

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Jason

2 years 7 months ago

This is a perfectly timed newsletter! I really wanted to get back into bodyweight exercise after a few minor lifting injuries but was floundering with what to do until I found the 12 minute athlete app and it’s basically everything mentioned here rolled into one. It really kicks my butt and has me gasping for air! So now I don’t feel like I neglected anything and I can feel great about my choice. I think I’ll throw in some sprints and that should be it. Thanks Mark!

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Marcia

2 years 7 months ago

I really need to try tabata. I like intervals. Well, I don’t like them. But you know what I mean.

It’s stuff most people know; you should sprint, you should take walks, you should do some form of resistance training, etc.

But to see the acute benefits of each is informative.

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Alison

2 years 7 months ago

I enjoy being active and pushing myself to find out what I can do…at the same time, I realize it’s important to be well-rounded & to use functional movements in all directions. This is a fairly typical weekly template for me: Monday – strength front squats or weighted lunges pullups push ups chops Tuesday agility, balance, coordination work using ladder &/or cone drills, bosu &/or swiss ball exercises, cable exercises, kettlebell exercises &/or angled barbell exercises. I usually set up some kind of metabolic conditioning circuit picking a few drills/exercises, rest as long as needed & go for 4- 6… Read more »

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Elizabeth

2 years 7 months ago

Am 65, female, both knees replaced in January. Am doing great. Would someone offer advice on training that avoids sprints or any running and any kneeling. Both are not helpful for long life of implants. Am enjoying weight training but love being efficient.

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Myra

2 years 7 months ago

Here’s a quote from one of Mark’s blog posts: When people hear “sprinting,” they think of 100 meter flat sprints on the track. Those are effective, sure, but they’re not the only way you can reap the benefits of sprint training. You can run hills (easier on the joints and more intense overall). You can cycle (easier on the joints and proven to work in dozens of sprinting studies). You can do it in the pool (either running in water or swimming). You can row or use the elliptical. Heck, if you loathe “cardio” of any kind you can probably… Read more »

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Shary

2 years 7 months ago

Core-strengthening modalities (yoga, Tai Chi, etc.) might be a possibility since you can usually modify or avoid poses that are hard on the knees. Check with your doctor. Many hospitals offer fitness classes that might be appropriate for you. If I’d had both knees replaced six months ago, I would simply walk every day. Walking is an excellent exercise that’s easy on the joints. Start out slowly on level ground, then gradually work up to longer walks, incorporating some hilly terrain if possible. Knee replacements usually need to be replaced again at some point, regardless. Keeping your weight at the… Read more »

I have knee issues too from years of terrible running form. No replacements but some major restrictions on what I can tolerate. I do “sprint” intervals with kettlebell swings & I believe they are actually helping my knees! Just bend the knees as far as you feel comfortable, start with light weight (you don’t even really need a kettlebell– a dumbbell will do) & listen to your body. I hope that helps!

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Sheila

2 years 7 months ago

thanks for the article, mark! it really helps a lot! however, one thing i have an issue with–which may be a personal thing to work on–is getting into the mindset that a little goes a long way. i know it doesn’t help to follow the more mainstream trainers, exercise gurus, and gym rats who constantly stress that you need to be in the gym for 2 hours every day to get the fabulous results quicker, but sometimes it’s hard to avoid that, and, honestly, who doesn’t want to envy those amazing bodies and keep them in your news feed for… Read more »

I generally detest malls, but the one thing they’re good for is walking in inclement weather. My hoop dance group even used to meet in an underused mall in the winter for playtime!

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Nika

2 years 7 months ago

Sprint a little, lift a little, walk a lot. That’s pretty much the conclusion I’ve come to over the past couple years myself.

Wondering how horseback riding stands in for walking? I ride about 45 minutes most days at moderate intensity (jumping and dressage, not noodling down the trail) and hope it’s a good stand-in, because I have trouble finding time for long walks as well.

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Shary

2 years 7 months ago

Walking frequently gets sold short by the gym junkies, but it’s an excellent way to gently work almost every muscle in the body, particularly as one gets older. Done outdoors (versus on a treadmill), it’s never boring. You don’t need any special equipment, and it can be done in all types of weather and in almost any locale.

That said, I think horseback riding is probably a good stand-in for walking since the rider doesn’t just sit there like a lump on a pickle. There is plenty of subtle body motion going on.

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Texman

2 years 7 months ago

AMEN

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Nika

2 years 7 months ago

Lump on a pickle, I love it! Gonna’ use that one.

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Scott B

2 years 6 months ago

Or, if you want to go in for a couple pieces of inexpensive equipment, purchase a set of walking or hiking sticks. After years of intermittent (meaning fits and starts, not interval) exercise of various sorts, and two not-so-good knees, hips and lower back, I’ve finally found pole-hiking to be the most effective, everyday, all-around best exercise to stay in shape. I do desert mountain hiking (because that is where I live and I can start the moment I step out my door). People who live in urban or suburban areas can do pole-hiking (or Nordic walking–very popular in Europe)… Read more »

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Texman

2 years 7 months ago

Sprint a little, walk a lot and just do things around the house that need to be done and make them into an exercise….like when you need to vacuum, muscle all the furniture around, mow and work in the yard, clean stuff up and move it around.
Wake up with a combination of pushups and planks.

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Gary

2 years 7 months ago

…does…not…compute…

What are these strange concepts? Vacuum? Mow?

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Texman

2 years 7 months ago

🙂

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tom LI

2 years 7 months ago

A 4 second all-out sprint???? How? I’ve barely taken 4 strides?

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Clay

2 years 7 months ago

Actually 4 seconds is long enough to get at least 10-12 full strides. Your legs go super fast when you are sprinting. I think you’d take more than one stride per second even walking.

If I’m honest, it was what I had planned anyway for tonight, but I shall enjoy it all the more for knowing I can do a short session and then sit in the sauna for longer, and all because I’m doing good for myself!

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Damien Gray

2 years 7 months ago

A good book for those who want to pursue this topic in a little more in-depth is “Body by Science” by John Little and Doug McGuff. It gives you the science behind why less is often more when you are trying to get fit.

I’m puzzled & disappointed that only the men achieved strength gains in number 3. Do you have any idea why women only saw aerobic gains?

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ntrojnky

2 years 7 months ago

Back in the old days of MDA Mark would answer people’s questions here on the comments board. I know you’re busy these days with you’re empire growing as large as it has but maybe you could employ one or two certified primal folks to read all the comments every day and offer responses. It’s frustrating that we have questions to things in your awesome posts and never get answers anymore. Don’t leave us hangin’ Mark!!

Hi, ntrojnky, I read every comment that’s posted. I try to do the same for every email that’s sent to me as well, and answer as many as I can. I’ll admit, these days the volume is a challenge, so I’m forced to be selective. You may know, I often answer both comments and emails in my Dear Mark series that I publish every Monday. I literally can’t answer every comment and email (there’s not enough time in the day, and only one of me!), but if the question is relevant to a large number of people, there’s a good… Read more »

This is a great post! So many people fail to start because they hate ‘exercise’ and think it is too time consuming. This will be a great resource to get people moving!

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Edie

2 years 7 months ago

I really like bodyweight training, for the simple fact that it has proved the best way to keep my exercise discipline. I have been applying this ‘minimalist’ routine with great results for quite a while.

I probably don’t invest more than 10 minutes a day, and I look and feel great. It’s all about consistency and small gains adding up, and bodyweight training is conducive to that. There is always floor around.
My routine is:
Push ups
Squats
Handstand pushups (the variation with my legs on a chair, not the full type)
Pull ups

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TM

2 years 7 months ago

I found Paleo through Art DeVany’s book and MDA has really helped keep me going. The results have been great – thanks so much for your website. My DeVany workout is 3X per week, starting with 6 minutes of stationary bike done asymmetrically (one minute full out-low resistance, one minute slow with high resistance alternating). Then to the leg machines and after that some upper body. The weights are also asymmetric with 15,8,4 reps and increasing resistance. Moving quickly without rest makes it pretty aerobic and the whole thing takes 20-30 minutes. I go at it before lunch and a… Read more »

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David

2 years 7 months ago

I just finished eating a big ass salad. I think I’ll go for a 15 minute walk.

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pdiddy

2 years 7 months ago

Anything is better than nothing of course, but I’m surprised to see Mark discussing the idea of minimum effective doses of movement, as opposed to continuing to advocate for lots of movement spread throughout the day, week, month, year, life.

I see a distinction here, pdiddy, between getting the most out of your dedicated workouts (e.g. time at the gym), and daily movement, general activity, play, and so on.

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pdiddy

2 years 7 months ago

good point. not an either/or situation!

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Clay

2 years 7 months ago

Also it’s more realistic. I’m at my computer for way too long every day. So when I move, I move a lot – intensely. I don’t have the luxury of spreading out moderate movement throughout the day. You tell someone they can improve their health in seven minutes of intense exercise three time per week and they are sold.

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archaeologyboy

2 years 7 months ago

my minimalist workout for when I am time-crunched: 10 burpees 4 pullups (as fast as possible) x4-5 sets (more if i can handle it) either sprinting-style (nice long breaks between the sets) or for overall time (ie I try to keep my breaks as short as possible) I’m pretty sure it’s working my whole body, and as such is a fair replacement for a lift-heavy-things workout, and it’s also very cardiovascular, so is a fair replacement for sprinting (it’s my bad weather sprint workout). That said, my workouts are fairly consistent, but I need to get more movement into my… Read more »

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dale mcvay

2 years 7 months ago

for the folks with knee”issues” ( or even with good knees) try the pool!
use a jogging belt to help keep your form,and you can ” sprint” in the water w/out any impact. plus its a great upper body workout as well!

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Jen

2 years 7 months ago

… and to carry on from Dale’s comment above, if you are walking in a pool try using pool gloves (webbed – wet suit material) and it adds some resistance for upper body workout.

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Georgina

2 years 7 months ago

The tabata sounds nice. The question i have for this study is ” what was the fitness level of the test subjects at the start of the study?” if they were newbies such results would be wonderful. If they were experienced fit folks the results would be more than awesome! The fitter i get the more “work” it takes to improve. Where a person is on the fitness spectrum makes a difference. Remember folks, question everything!

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Amber

2 years 7 months ago

After injuring my knee doing some sprint training and having subsequent surgery, running or impact exercise is off limits for me permanently. So now I walk, a lot! I mix it up with short 20 min very brisk walking and twice a week a longer 90 min easier paced walk. Once a week I do a HIIT session on the bike which only takes 10 mins including warm up and cool down, and some brief body weight stuff scattered throuought the week too. And every day I dedicate 10 mins to a good stretch. It’s not a huge investment in… Read more »

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Bob

7 months 4 days ago

Warning to others. Never ever, ever start a Sprint from a full stop. Jog into it if you like your knees.

I love that you still read all the comments, Mark. That’s certainly a challenge in and of itself and quite commendable. I love this post, as it speaks to what Clay said. So many people work seemingly endless hours at a computer. Tell them that a complete workout intense enough to make real gains can be accomplished in seven minutes, and I think you have a winning idea. Thanks for this post, and really, all of them!

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Tony

2 years 7 months ago

If I am following a fasting protocol of 18 hours (8 pm to noon the following day) would these workouts be safe to perform fasted around 11 am, then have my first meal as my post workout meal. I was thinking I would walk or hike (hike on non training days) in the mornings, then three days a week I would do the 7 minute workout twice and the tabata or sprint one day a week before. I would rotate the one day of sprinting and tabata training each week. I am 5’8″ 218 pounds at 29% BF. My goal… Read more »

The minimum dose concept is HUGE!
That being said, addressing functional exercises is important. A ‘minimum’ dose type program will be much more beneficial if the exercises themselves are functional patterns. I like to use the 7 Primal Movement Patterns by Paul Check in a lot of my programs.
Love the Primal Blueprint Fitness eBook Mark. Really helps me with my programming and is super easy to follow!

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bzbee

2 years 6 months ago

First of all, I love most of this post; short, informative and really sums it up. As a former Triathlete (and Ironman) I’ve changed my life totally for the less-is-more.. (as oppose to more-more and much-more) Today I do only one 2-3 weeks of Ido Portal 2h workout, which is really really great but I want to adopt what you wrote here and get into some kind of a weekly routine. One thing you wrote that confused me a lot was: “…many of these protocols will have crossover effects with each other”. Do you mean that for example “maintain cardiovascular… Read more »

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Jason Trew

2 years 6 months ago

Are these the kind of ideas we should expect in the Primal Endurance book?

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Pam Forrester

2 years 6 months ago

This is all a bit confusing. I just went back and read the beginning of Primal Fitness Blueprint. I am a woman in my 60’s. I have been LC/Primal/whole food for 4 1/2 years now. I walk frequently. I began to do body weight exercises to prevent loss of muscle. I have consistently done the eccentric version of pull-ups, push-ups, squats, 17 lb. hand weight lifting, (a la Jonathan Bailor) and 1.5-2 min regular plank for a year. I have less consistently done the regular version of these as in the Primal Fitness Blueprint. I have been too lazy to… Read more »

Yes I tried the 7 day workout and it is effective. Thank you for sharing this article. The only thing I would like to add is that I recently got a spin bike and found that to be more effective and better than walking especially since I live in a place where temperatures can soar to 50 degrees in the summers and walking isn’t always an option.

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Nelly Johnson

10 months 5 days ago

Hi. I am a triathlete and train 20-25 hours a week. My daily calorie needs are between 4000 and 5000 kcal. Which foods do you recommend for me to use to substitute bread? Should it be oats and rice? Is corn (corn galettes/cakes) also good?

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reed cooper

6 months 20 days ago

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